With Wednesday's launch of Google Latitude, the company famous for its search engine enters the controversial world of "location-aware" mobile technology. It works like this: you download software to a mobile phone (yours or someone else's) and the phone broadcasts the user's location. This information can be tracked on a map, in real time, from a computer or another cell phone. Although, as Babble's Bret Singer points out, "that assumes you can use your child's cell phone better than they can. Which is probably not the case."

Investigators Posing as Teens Propositioned for Sex
Staff members of the New York Attorney General signed up for Facebook pretending to be teens and were repeatedly asked if they had any "nude pics" to share -- and it gets worse.

Google Latitude offers users privacy controls, which allow them to protect their information, making it available only to certain people; it also permits users to go "offline" at any time. Latitude also has an "override" feature that lets users enter their location manually, which means that your kids can still say they're going to the library when they're really at that keg party.

Some things never change.

Call me old fashioned, but I don't see a need for this. One of our jobs as parents is to teach our kids to be responsible, which means letting them out of our sight every once in a while. And yes, kids will make bad choices (don't tell me you were always where you told your mom you would be when you were in high school) but if we don't give them the opportunity to make any choices, we don't teach them how to make the good ones.

So let's assume you're not using this as a safety device, but as a social networking tool -- again, I'm not sure I get it. I don't want to know where my friends are all the time, and my teen certainly doesn't need that distraction. Kids need to learn that it's okay to be alone sometimes; this type of technology emphasizes the exact opposite.
What do you think -- is this a huge step forward in technoparenting, or just another way to undermine kids' trust in adults? Do you want to know where your child (or spouse or sister or neighbor) is all the time? Or are you good with occasionally being out of touch?

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Sprint's Cellphone For Young Kids Lets Parents Keep A Close WatchMany parents are comfortable with giving cellphones to teens , but young kids are a different story -- how do you introduce them to mobile technology without also exposing them to all kinds of dangers ? Sprint thinks its new WeGo phone is a good answer to that dilemma. The simple, rugged design not only limits a child's calling and messaging options to pre-approved contacts, but lets their parents track just about anything through mobile apps or the web.

Convienence Store Cook Helps Save Teen Shooting VictimTammie Shemberger has heard the old line about being stranded and needing money for gas, but nothing like this. “A lady came in the store saying that she needed some gas money, that there was a child in her car that had a gunshot,” says the cook at Azco Short Stop convenience store. “And then I said ‘Gun? Shot? Kid??' I said ‘No, no, no, no.' I grabbed the phone dialed 911 and ran out to the lady`s truck.”

I am almost 16 and think whoever wrote this article is correct. Kids need to make choices for themselves because if you don't let us make any choices then when we are grown up we still might because we never learned not to. It's an invasion of privacy also. It's like how the South Carolina police might charge michael phelps. Ohh boy he smoked pot, he did something wrong woopdi frickin do. Everyone does stupid crap and i could bet you take 10 police officers and at least 8 have smoked pot before or was drunk before 18 or 21 w/e the drinking age was. parents need to learn to trust there kids. Not totalt because kids will walk all over them but you can't keep us safe forever.

This is a pretty decent idea, they do sell cell phones with tracking abilities right now but those phones suck and are too kiddie like. As for this program, to really make it effective, they need to remove the features such as changing where your at or disabling because then what's the point, that will just make the kid lie and hide the truth more, as for adults, If they know how to use the program, they can cheat and show that they were somewhere that they weren't That sort of makes it worse. So for the scandelous and mischevous people who want to get away with things, It's a good idea. For actual parents or trusting people, It is completely bad.

I am over the age of 18. My father is a very posessive, fairly well connected, and investigative individual.. he threatened to place a system similar to this in my car and went so far as to purchase it! Oh the silly thought :). I retaliated by informing him that I had already been hacking into his e-mail account for years and that I frequently accessed his personal cell phone's voicemail as well. When he persisted, I e-mailed him a picture (which i accessed via satellite) of a black car that was foreign to my father's driveway (to my prior knowledge) which I had noticed a few weeks earlier. He has two cars, neither of them are black. Anyway it's safe to say he's backed off, and it's kool aid to say that the majority of you could very well be underestimating your children.

Well, I love the ability to see where my son is. We both have iPhone and a little app named TRACK YOUR KIDS. It allows us to see each other.I don't think it a privacy issue. Remember that as parents is our obligation to take care of our sons.

I have grown kids, & they have grown kids, I am not interested in tracking any of them but my wonderful husband of many years has alzhiamers and I could sure benefit from this if he was to become lost. I am currently checking into this. Good luck kids whether u r being naughty or nice.